Afghanistan's only music school completes exit from Kabul fearing Taliban crackdown
“When I speak with my friends and family in Kabul, they say
that music is very rare,” a pianist who escaped the Afghan capital said.
“Without music, the city almost feels dead.”
The last two of more than 270 students, faculty and staff
from Afghanistan’s only music school have left the country in the wake of the
Taliban’s takeover, the institution's founder said on Thursday.
“It was extremely emotional,” the Afghanistan National
Institute of Music’s founder and director Ahmad Sarmast said of students he greeted
at the airport in Doha on Tuesday. “They just couldn’t stop crying and I was
crying together with them.”
More than 100 students and faculty were able to escape to
the Qatari capital in October, but Sarmast, 59, and others had been working to
evacuate the remaining 200 students and staff who were missing some paperwork.
“I am very relieved,” he told NBC News over the the
telephone. “It’s good to see them happy, and also hopeful about the future.”
The 272 evacuees, including the all-female Zohra orchestra,
will continue on to Portugal next, where they were granted asylum, the school’s
officials said in a statement. They plan to resume the school’s activities
there.
Sarmast’s students and faculty are the lucky ones.
Thousands of Afghans have been trying to flee the country
since the United States and its allies withdrew their forces in August, seeking
to escape repression, violence and a crumbling economy. But musicians face an
especially difficult time under the austere fighters, whose interpretation of
Islam has led them to outlaw music altogether in the past.
While the departures could be lifesaving for the students
and faculty themselves, they are a blow to a decadeslong international effort
to foster the best and brightest of the country’s musicians.
Since the school was founded in 2010, its male and female
students have performed around the world — a symbol of progress in modern
Afghanistan.
After the invasion in 2001 and the previous Taliban
government’s departure, music thrived in Kabul and other parts of the country.
But the Taliban’s return in August has thrown a blanket of
silence over much of the country.
Although music has not been formally banned, people in
capital Kabul are cautious: Cafés and restaurants only play music inside, and
even then — quietly. Less music is played on radio and TV. Wedding halls have
stopped playing live music altogether, according to several wedding hall owners
who spoke to NBC News.
“When I speak with my friends and family in Kabul, they say
that music is very rare,” said Arson Fahim, a pianist who escaped the Afghan
capital shortly before the Taliban takeover. “They say that without music, the
city almost feels dead.”
While Afghanistan has a rich, centurieslong music tradition,
and the Quran does not explicitly prohibit music or make it “un-Islamic,” the
Taliban are using their extremist interpretation of Islam to justify erasing
history and identity, of which music is a mainstay, historian Mejgan Massoumi
at Stanford University said.
“Musicians are terrified. They are in hiding. They have
buried and destroyed their instruments. They have silenced themselves.”
“It will be devastating for the Afghan people to attempt to
silence voices and souls,” Massoumi said.
But Taliban commanders have told NBC News that listening to
music is against Islamic law. While they have not issued an overarching ban on
all music since their takeover in August, they have raised awareness about the
“evils of music,” Taliban spokesman Bilal Karimi said.
When they were first in power between 1996 and 2001, the
Taliban banned all music outright. But this time around, trying to project a
more moderate image, the group has stayed away from issuing a sweeping ban.
Despite promises of moderation, the Taliban have unleashed a
brutal crackdown since returning to power as they try to consolidate control
over the fractious country and force Afghans to adhere to their strict
interpretation of Islam.
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